you & me part 5: Photography

Mike & I

Choosing a photographer was the #1 most important vendor choice to me for our wedding. Now, I know you all don’t come here to listen to me gush about my wedding, so I’ll keep this to a minimum, but Kate Chin of Captured Moments photo & video did an absolutely phenomenal job of capturing our day, plus she somehow managed to get all the editorial shots I had on my list as well. Great work and even more importantly, really wonderful to work with, I’d recommend her to anyone getting married in the area!

Me with my mom
Groomsmen
Bridesmaids
Bridesmaids

you & me part 4: Place cards

I fell in love with the idea of each guest being welcomed to our reception by a petite envelope especially for them. Each silver envelope held a card letterpress printed with a number that coordinated with their table. I forgot to consider that printing 160 tiny cards with 20 different numbers would be a huge undertaking (particularly when started just 10 days before the wedding), but the idea came to fruition exactly how I pictured.

I do have two extra sets of numbers 1 through 20, so if anyone’s interested, they’re available here.

you & me part 3: Reception Décor

I’m not a huge flower person. I appreciate them when they bloom in our yard and all, but I’ve never been one to order flowers just to have them and there’s not a faux flower to be found in my home.

For a while, I was going with floral centerpieces for our wedding because, you know, that’s just what people do. The more I thought about it, the less enthused I became and so I started researching more exciting alternatives. Thank you design*sponge and Martha Stewart!

My solution? A cluster of letterpressed luminaries in the center of each table.

For the cake and gift table, I carried the ampersand theme (distilled from the you & me of our invites) throughout—I even found these great resin ampersands that I painted silver to coordinate.

When guests arrived, they picked up an envelope with their name on it that contained a card letterpress printed with a number, which coordinated with a table, which had the number printed on the luminaries.

Photos by Captured Moments photo & video.

you & me part 2: Flowers

From the moment we announced our engagement, friends and family began loading me up with bridal magazines. I fell in love with the Picasso calla lilies featured in one such publication. I also knew I wanted a modern, single flower, tightly packed bouquet. Simple, right?

Wrong. Apparently, callas are one of the more expensive flowers commonly available. And because of the style of bouquet I wanted, we needed a lot of them. Oh, and even though the florist didn’t have to do much, he would double the price of the flowers to account for his labor.

Much to my mom’s chagrin, I decided to order the flowers through an online wholesaler and make the bouquets myself. Come on, I took floral arranging in 4-H!

I know you’re all waiting for a hilarious tale of mishap after mishap, but sorry. The flowers arrived on time and in perfect condition, arranging them was easy and they stood up for the entire reception (and the gift opening the following day!). Oh, and going the DIY route saved me several hundred dollars!

Photos by Captured Moments photo & video.

you & me part 1: Invitations

Hello readers! (Are there any of you left out there?) So sorry for once again becoming MIA—it’s been a busy couple of months. First and foremost, we got married! I of course went the DIY route for as much as I could—which, turns out, is completely insane, but I couldn’t have been happier with the results of all the projects.

First up: Invitations

For those of you who know me in real life, it will come as no surprise that the day after I received Dave Matthews Band’s Big Whiskey and the GrooGrux King in the mail (I pre-ordered, natch) I announced to the fiance that we would be dancing to “You & Me” for our first dance. Let’s just stop right here; have you heard it? No? I’m going to need you to go ahead and click right here, or here if you’re more into live music, before we can proceed.

There, I feel better. See what I mean? Beautiful song, PERFECT for a first dance.

Anyway, I’m getting sidetracked. The point I’m trying to make here is that this song inspired the design for the invitations, which I naturally carried through all the stationery and decor for the entire day. What? We need another aside? Ok, here goes:

Why do you need consistency throughout the visuals for an event? (Some might call it a theme, but I hesitate to do so…makes me think of the appalling prom themes we had in high school: “Under the Sea,” “A Midsummer Night’s Dream”—the last one you might think could be pretty gorgeous, except that whoever was in charge of the decor chose to accentuate the browns and olives of the forest setting instead of the magical quality of Shakespeare’s masterpiece. Anyway, really off track now.)

First of all, I needed a consistent identity for my wedding because I’m a graphic designer. It’s what I do.There’s nothing I hate more than receiving a save the date with one look, an invitation with a completely separate one, placecards that have nothing to do with either and a thank-you that appears to be chosen completely at random.

Second, having a consistent look for your event forces you to really think about what your goals for the day are and how you want to represent that. It helps you to avoid magpie syndrome (“Ooh! Shiny thing!”). Your invitation tells guests what to expect and your thank you note reminds them of your day.

Anyway, back to the invitation. I’ve designed invitations for many different couples holding receptions that are as unique as they are. I’ve done tons of research into invite trends, I surround myself with good design day in and day out. But when it came to designing my own, I was stumped. I literally sat with a blank page open on my computer for three weeks.

Finally, I decided to eschew illustration entirely and focus on making the typography the star of the show. (Readers who know my design work are saying “DUH!” right now.) Once I finally made a decision, everything came together easily and turned out beautifully.

Our day was simple and elegant and so were our invitations. I chose the tall and skinny format suited to a #10 envelope (if they hadn’t been so heavy, they could have been mailed with regular postage!).

I spent several full days printing—completely filling our house with pieces of cardboard covered in invite pages as we waited for them to dry—and then my mom came down for a weekend of assembly. I kept it pretty simple; just a single grommet in the corner purchased from a local scrapbook shop. I paired the silver and plum printing on Crane’s bright white lettra with metallic silver envelopes that I printed in plum.

Instead of creating a separate RSVP card, I incorporated it into the invitation itself and simply cut a line of perforation above it so guests could tear them off and return them in the provided mini envelope.